A familiar pattern shows up at the Grammys every few years. A very young artist breaks through fast and ends up competing with peers who have already been working for a decade.
That is where sombr lands this year.
At 20, he is the youngest nominee for best new artist in four years. His debut album, I Barely Know Her, reached the top 10 on the Billboard 200 and produced a top 10 hit on the Hot 100 with Back to Friends. He wrote every song himself and co-produced most of the record, handling two tracks entirely on his own.
Billboard uses his nomination as a starting point to look back at solo artists who earned best new artist nods before turning 21. The list spans decades, from early teen idols of the 1950s to modern pop stars. Some won immediately. Others lost and later built long, award-filled careers.
The broader takeaway is simple. Early recognition does not follow one formula, and a nomination at a young age does not define an artist’s future.
He now joins a small group of artists who arrived very early and were noticed right away. Historically, Best New Artist nominations for performers under 21 often signal a shift in the Academy’s effort to reflect youth-driven market trends, regardless of whether the artist takes home the trophy on Grammy night.




















